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DUSIB to clear its land of encroachments, provide housing to slum dwellers
DUSIB to clear its land of encroachments, provide housing to slum dwellers

Time of India

time07-07-2025

  • General
  • Time of India

DUSIB to clear its land of encroachments, provide housing to slum dwellers

New Delhi: With govt exploring various options to provide housing to the city's slum dwellers, Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board (DUSIB) has decided to conduct a survey of land under its jurisdiction and identify encroachments over them. In a meeting held a few days ago, the chief executive officer of DUSIB also directed officials to map jhuggi jhopri clusters that have come up on the agency's land and the area encroached upon by each cluster along with the number of families living there. Officials said the CEO directed DUSIB engineers to submit the report at the earliest. An official said the current dispensation issued strict directives to all stakeholder departments to ensure that the slum dwellers meeting the eligibility criteria are provided with pucca housing under Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana . Of the 675 recorded slum clusters, 378 have come up on land belonging to DDA, railways and other central govt agencies, while the rest are on land under DUSIB, MCD and others. You Can Also Check: Delhi AQI | Weather in Delhi | Bank Holidays in Delhi | Public Holidays in Delhi As per estimates, Delhi's 20% population, or nearly 50 lakh people, live in more than 675 slums, spread over nearly 7.5km—0.5% of 1,483 square kilometres of the city's total area. Delhi Development Authority has already initiated an exercise to conduct a detailed survey of central land encroached upon by slums. Officials said the district-wise mapping of JJ clusters will include key details such as the existing land use, number of households and the total area of each cluster. The survey of all vacant lands under DUSIB's jurisdiction will include details such as the size of land parcels, whether it is encroached, availability and condition of boundary walls, current land use status and use of the land as per the approved layout plan. "This comprehensive assessment will help in identifying viable land parcels for future housing development initiatives and monetisation," said an official. To provide the slum dwellers with pucca houses, the govt came up with Delhi Slum and Jhuggi Jhopri Rehabilitation and Relocation Policy, 2015, stressing in situ rehabilitation.

Dharavi-Like Makeover: Cut-Paste Or Misfit?
Dharavi-Like Makeover: Cut-Paste Or Misfit?

Time of India

time23-06-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

Dharavi-Like Makeover: Cut-Paste Or Misfit?

New Delhi: Constantly under attack from the opposition over the demolition of illegal settlements, albeit on the directions of the courts, CM Rekha Gupta recently announced that her govt will study Mumbai's Dharavi redevelopment model to explore the possibility of replicating the same in the capital to provide housing to the residents of 675 slum clusters. D haravi, a vast slum sprawl in the heart of Mumbai, will be redeveloped through a special-purpose vehicle set up through a joint venture between Adani Group and Maharashtra govt. According to estimates, close to a million people live in Dharavi, which is located over a total area of just 2.5 sq km. The area also houses thousands of small-scale manufacturing units of leather, textiles and pottery, among many others. Adani Realty won the bid in 2022 to execute the redevelopment in a phased manner over a period of 7–10 years. As per reports, the Dharavi Redevelopment Master Plan was on the verge of finalisation and will be submitted to the authorities soon. It will then be placed before the public for suggestions. But can the same plan be replicated in Delhi? Those who work closely with slum dwellers on the issue of their housing and rehabilitation, and experts, believe the "model" is not fit for the capital for the simple reason that Dharavi and Delhi's slums are completely different. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Giao dịch CFD với công nghệ và tốc độ tốt hơn IC Markets Đăng ký Undo While Dharavi is spread across nearly 256 hectares of contiguous land, Delhi's slum clusters are much smaller and spread across the capital. As per estimates, Delhi's 20% population, or nearly 50 lakh people, live in more than 675 slums, spread over 0.5% of 1,483 sq km of the city's total area, which comes to nearly 7.5km. According to the list of slums available on the website of Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board, these slums are much smaller in size, with a large number of them providing housing to fewer than 50 households. According to Aravind Unni, an urban policy researcher, Mumbai has a separate govt body, named Slum Redevelopment Authority (SRA), for the rehabilitation of slum clusters. But the fact is that it is not the same agency but a special-purpose vehicle that will redevelop Dharavi because of its size. "Dharavi is mammoth. The number of houses is huge. SRA could never do that kind of redevelopment in Dharavi; that's why a new authority (Navbharat Mega Developers Private Limited — a joint venture between govt of Maharashtra and Adani Group) has been formed. The scale of the area is totally different. In Delhi, the 675-plus slums are spread across the city. It does not offer a big patch of land or the scale that Dharavi does," Unni said. To rehabilitate the slum dwellers in the capital and provide them with pucca houses, govt came up with Delhi Slum and Jhuggi Jhopri Rehabilitation and Relocation Policy, 2015. The policy stressed in situ rehabilitation, which means providing pucca houses to slum dwellers at the area where they were already residing. The policy stated that only in conditions where in situ rehabilitation was not possible would slum dwellers be relocated. This decision was taken because a large number of more than 53,000 flats built previously for the economically weaker sections in localities in the periphery of the city — Narela, Bawana and Savda Ghewra, and many more — under schemes, such as Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission, remained unoccupied and turned into ghost towns. The city's poor, who work largely in areas around their slums, cannot afford to live in the periphery and spend a lot of time and money travelling to the centre of the city to work. These flats are in a dilapidated condition now and require an investment of thousands of crores of rupees to make them liveable again. In the last few years, Delhi provided housing to a small number of people under the in situ redevelopment model in three areas — Kalkaji, Kathputli Colony at Shadipur and Jailorwala Bagh — but left out many of them as they failed to meet the eligibility criteria. As per the rehabilitation policy, only those having their dwelling units built before Jan 1, 2015, in slum clusters in existence before Jan 1, 2006, are eligible for pucca housing, provided they have their names mentioned in a DUSIB survey and possess one of the 12 identification documents. Unni said even the in situ rehabilitation scheme was not successful due to little interest shown by private developers who looked for higher floor-area ratio, more land and bigger incentives. "Since slum clusters occupy only 0.5% of the total land of the city, let them exist where they are. 'Jahan Jhuggi, Wahan Makaan' is the best policy. And in cases where slum houses are in good condition, the clusters should be regularised the way unauthorised colonies are being done. Only those clusters should be considered for relocation that exist in areas such as close to railway tracks," Unni said. Sunil Kumar Aledia, executive director of Centre for Holistic Development, which works closely with the deprived, also said that the clusters should be allowed to exist where they are located, as most of them worked in the close vicinity. "Provide them with all basic amenities such as water, electricity, drainage, etc., and let them live there. They are part of an ecosystem and cannot sustain if moved out in the name of rehabilitation. Their voices should be heard, and they should be included in any plan right from the stage of inception," Aledia said. Indu Prakash Singh, a housing rights activist, also agreed that a "Dharavi-style" plan was not suitable for redevelopment of the city's slums, as Mumbai's sprawling slum was a "livelihood ecosystem" while in Delhi the dwellers depended on the neighbouring areas for their livelihood. "The main objective of a private developer will be profit, not the life and the livelihood of the poor living in those slums. Let the slums be there where they exist. Build houses and consider them for giving on rent to the poor. Provide them with loan holidays or loans on very small interest so that the poor can think of buying their own small houses without stressing overpaying huge EMIs," Singh said. A senior Delhi govt official, however, said the CM had so far directed them to check the feasibility of a 'Dharavi-like' redevelopment plan. "We will soon work out the modalities and study the model. We will only recommend it if it is suitable for the city," said an official.

After demolitions in Delhi's Madrasi Camp, Tamil Nadu offers support to families
After demolitions in Delhi's Madrasi Camp, Tamil Nadu offers support to families

Scroll.in

time02-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Scroll.in

After demolitions in Delhi's Madrasi Camp, Tamil Nadu offers support to families

The Tamil Nadu government on Sunday said that it will support families looking to return to their native districts after their homes in the Madrasi Camp in New Delhi's Jangpura area were demolished. The decades-old camp, built overlooking the Barapullah drain near Nizamuddin Railway Station, housed 370 tenements and was predominantly inhabited by families originally from Tamil Nadu. On Sunday, the Delhi Development Authority demolished the homes in the camp on the directions of the Delhi High Court, The Indian Express reported. The Delhi government was directed to relocate the families as the camp was allegedly blocking the Barapullah drain, which was leading to waterlogging. Hours after the demolition, the Tamil Nadu government stated that it was in 'active coordination' with the residents of the Madrasi Camp to ensure every possible support was extended to them without delay. It added that Chief Minister MK Stalin had directed the Tamil Nadu House in New Delhi, the guest house of the state government, to facilitate and oversee the coordination efforts. 'Comprehensive support, including assistance for livelihood and other essential needs, will be extended to them,' said the state government. 'This assistance will be facilitated through the offices of the concerned District Collectors to ensure timely and effective implementation.' Describing the Madrasi Camp as an 'unauthorised encroachment', the High Court on May 9 directed authorities to clear the area along the Barapullah drain. It said the camp was obstructing drainage and causing severe waterlogging in the surrounding areas during the monsoons. The court had also directed that eligible residents be rehabilitated and relocated under provisions of the Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board Act and the Delhi Slum and Jhuggi Jhopri Rehabilitation and Relocation Policy, The New Indian Express reported. Subsequently, the Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board determined that only 215 out of the 370 residents in the camp were eligible for housing. These families were allotted residential units in Narela, a northern suburb over 35 kms from the camp, The Indian Express reported. The remaining 155 families had reportedly failed to meet documentation or eligibility criteria. The settlement, which is more than six decades old, housed Tamil-speaking migrants who had arrived in the national capital seeking employment as domestic workers, cooks and daily-wage labourers.

Inside Delhi's Madrasi Camp, the fear of a community disintegration
Inside Delhi's Madrasi Camp, the fear of a community disintegration

The Hindu

time17-05-2025

  • Politics
  • The Hindu

Inside Delhi's Madrasi Camp, the fear of a community disintegration

Each home in Delhi's Madrasi Camp sports a drishti bommai (a black mask with exaggerated features such as bulging eyes and red lips). Invariably, at the entryway to each single-room home are two lemons covered in red powder to keep the 'evil eye' away. But Yennu Malai, a 50-year-old resident of the camp, laments that 'bad luck' has fallen upon everyone over the past year. The camp, which was established between 1968 and 1970 in the shadow of the Barapullah drain, will be demolished for the upcoming restoration and cleaning project of the 16-kilometre nallah, a Mughal structure dating back about 400 years. Sitting cross-legged on a cement slab in front of his home, Malai, a vegetable seller, looks over his shoulder at the soon-to-be demolished Madrasi Camp in south Delhi's Jangpura-B, near the Hazrat Nizamuddin railway station. He has called the locality home his entire life. Malai, talking to his brother-in-law and sister, questions the government's logic, angry, but also chuckling at the irony: 'My ration, voter, and Aadhaar cards say Madrasi Camp, and suddenly, they want us to pick up everything and leave. How is this justice?' Malai is referring to the May 9 Delhi High Court order to demolish Madrasi Camp starting June 1. The HC has also directed government departments to ensure proper rehabilitation of the eligible residents of the unauthorised colony. Madrasi Camp has 370 shanties, and families living in 189 of them have been found eligible for rehabilitation under the Delhi Slum and Jhuggi Jhopri Rehabilitation and Relocation Policy, 2015. They will be given housing in Narela, about 40 km from their current location. The public toilet in Madrasi Camp is barely functional, and residents relieve themselves on the train tracks, a minute's walk away. The odour of the sewage from the drain on one side and garbage-collection facility on the other, is overpowering, but residents say that over the decades they have built a community here, based on a common culture. Forced to move out During the rainy season in 2024, a public interest litigation was filed in the HC on the flooding in parts of Nizamuddin East and Jangpura. The court had ordered agencies such as Delhi Development Authority (DDA), Archaeological Survey of India (ASI, which maintains the Barapullah), Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD), and Public Works Department (PWD) to clean up the oversaturated drain. On September 1, 2024, the MCD demolished a few homes in the locality and removed all street vendors from the area. An official in the MCD says, 'This was done as people were hindering the cleaning of the Barapullah drain.' A week after, residents of the camp were issued eviction notices by Delhi government's PWD. This was later halted by then Chief Minister Atishi and the matter was taken up in the HC. On May 9 this year, a Bench of Justices Pratibha Singh and Manmeet Pritam Singh Arora heard a bunch of applications filed by Madrasi Camp dwellers seeking the court's intervention in their relocation to Narela. 'The rehabilitation of the Madrasi Camp dwellers is essential for the de-clogging of the Barapullah drain. None of the dwellers can claim any rights beyond the right of rehabilitation, as the land is public land, which is encroached upon,' the court said. The court has given the dwellers time between May 20 and May 31 to shift out of Madrasi Camp, following which, demolition will begin from June 1. Among those who now live in fear of the future is Kutan, a 55-year-old resident of the camp, who says his father and grandfather walked from Chennai to Delhi in 1968 because they couldn't afford a ticket. Kutan speaks about how his family found a home in Delhi after leaving Chennai, where they worked on 200- to 300-acre farmlands on the city's outskirts for meagre money. 'One day, my father decided not to work for the rich, so the family just left home in search of a job. They came to Delhi and found work as labourers. Slowly, they uprooted our entire family from Chennai, who came here. The city was unfamiliar, things were fast, no one rested,' Kutan says, as he waters his plants. Each home in the camp has a few pots and plants. People say they have constructed their houses brick by brick and gradually made them homes with plants, colourful walls, kolam (white designs on the ground), and pictures of deities. Kutan's family did odd jobs to sustain themselves. With the money he earned, he got all four of his children married. They live in Chennai, and now he feels that his last option is to move back. Like him, many in the camp are contemplating doing this. Fixing his blue and green checkered kaili mundu (lungi), Kutan says, 'I would like to stay in Delhi till the time I can work on my own. I don't want to go back and be a burden on any of my children.' He laughs while saying that every time he goes back to Chennai, he must get kaili mundus as gifts for friends in Delhi. Madrasi Camp has houses almost glued together, with very little natural light permeating through the narrow alleys. Most of the women in the camp work as cleaners in some of Delhi's most valued real estate. The men are cooks, rickshaw-pullers, vegetable sellers, and workers in government jobs. For many, the move to Narela will result in a loss of livelihood as it takes nearly three hours to travel from there to their current places of work. Buses are infrequent; there is no metro connectivity; and other transportation is expensive with an auto charging about ₹500 for the journey. Narayan, 30, (name changed to protect privacy) works at the Uprashtrapati Bhawan, the vice-president's house, in the housekeeping department. Standing near a pile of garbage, while swatting a fly away from his face, he says that three generations of his family have lived in the camp and worked around the area. He will not be able to move to Narela, he says, but is also daunted by the rent in south Delhi that ranges from ₹10,000-₹15,000 for a room. A community of their own Many in the camp have been allotted houses in DDA's beige flats for the EWS (Economically Weaker Sections) in Narela, on a 99-year lease. Residents claim the houses are no better than the jhuggi-jhopri (hutment) cluster they are currently living in. However, there are some who have not been allotted flats. Valar Madi, a 45-year-old domestic worker who has been living in Madrasi Camp for 17 years, is one among these people. While fixing her gold mookuthi (nose ring), she says, 'My husband just passed away and I have a young child. Here, I did not have to worry about rent, so whatever I earned went into his education and our survival, but now they are telling me I will not be given a house, because my voter card was deleted.' As Madi tears up, the women gather around her. They console her and say she can come and live with them. Sarayana, 43, has been allotted a home. Her husband too is no more, and she and her daughter live together. Just like Madi, she feels that her community in the Madrasi Camp is her support system. Playing with the pallu of her saree nervously, she says, 'Ever since my husband died, the women here have kept me occupied and happy. They make sambar that reminds me of my village near Viluppuram district.' In the evening, the women gather around the temple, which has a tall idol of Karthik and smaller idols of Ganesha and other gods. As the women pray, the children play cricket or cycle around. The children switch easily between Hindi and Tamil. They sit on the road to study. Bembi, now 60, was only 5 when her parents boarded a train from Kallakurichi in Tamil Nadu to the New Delhi Railway Station. Hindi was a language her family struggled with for many years. Now, Bembi sits in her red cotton podavai (saree), eating corn from a kadhai (pan). Her hair is oiled neatly, and her gold earrings shine bright. With her sit six of her best friends, as they chat about how their day went. This is how they learnt Hindi. 'We were young, and our mothers worked as domestic workers. Our fathers were labourers or drivers, so when they came home, we'd sit with them, and learn simple Hindi words every day,' Bembi's friend, Parvathi, 60, who was her neighbour in her village, explains, her hands dancing to express herself better. Once the settlement (basti) took root, the pejorative 'Madrasi' was how other Delhiites began to refer to it. Bembi and her friends discuss what they're cooking for dinner. One is planning to make dosa; another rajma-chawal. Their food habits have adapted too. Politics around the demolition Over the past eight months, the camp has been at the centre of high political drama and conflict between the various civic agencies and political parties that hold a stake in Delhi. During the initial State actions in September 2024, the then ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) had blamed the BJP for the demolitions. They protested with a section of the residents. Meanwhile, the BJP, with another faction of the residents, put the blame on AAP. During the Assembly election in the Capital this February, leaders from both parties visited the camp, promising support. However, residents say after the BJP's win, there has been no support from the party that formed the Delhi government. Meanwhile, the residents of the camp protested alongside leaders from the Communist Party of India (Marxist). Furthermore, Congress leader and Lok Sabha member Karti P. Chidambaram wrote to Chief Minister Rekha Gupta seeking her intervention to stop the demolition of Madrasi Camp in Jangpura. 'These families, many of whom have lived in this area for decades, have recently been served demolition notices by the DDA. While alternative flats have been allotted in Narela, this relocation poses a grave threat to the residents' livelihood, education, and cultural roots, particularly for the children,' he wrote. All the children of the camp study in the Delhi Tamil Education Association's (DTEA) Lodhi Estate school for a fee of ₹250 per month. According to the school's officials, for over a century the school has been catering to Tamilian families living in Delhi. They are taught Tamil along with Hindi and English, and stay immersed in the culture of their home State. A teacher in the school says, 'The children are taught keeping their Tamilian identities in mind, and the parents like this. If they are shifted, many are likely to discontinue their education.' The school had also written to the authorities requesting them not to demolish the camp, or to move residents near any of the seven DTEA branches. Residents are now gradually packing their bags, scoffing at the media attention which they believe is leading nowhere, and making plans to rent homes closer to this area so that they can continue their current jobs. Many are considering moving back to their villages, even though they have never lived there. Malai says, 'Even if I move, who says I will be able work and adjust there. I will be leaving the home my parents built, the one I got married in and my children grew up. They are not just taking my house, but my community and livelihood.' Edited by Sunalini Mathew

Delhi HC postpones Madrasi Camp demolition to June 1, says need to relocate its residents before monsoon
Delhi HC postpones Madrasi Camp demolition to June 1, says need to relocate its residents before monsoon

Indian Express

time12-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Indian Express

Delhi HC postpones Madrasi Camp demolition to June 1, says need to relocate its residents before monsoon

The Delhi High Court has postponed the demolition of the unauthorised Madrasi Camp — a jhuggi-jhopdi (JJ) cluster located on the Barapullah drain bank near Jangpura — to June 1, nearly three weeks after the scheduled date of May 10. The authorities had issued a demolition notice to the squatters to remove encroachments and unauthorised construction on the Barapullah drain to de-clog it. A bench of Justices Prathiba Singh and Manmeet Pritam Singh Arora was hearing a bunch of applications filed by Madrasi Camp dwellers, seeking the court's intervention in their relocation to Narela. The court said that the relocation of Madrasi Camp residents is of 'utmost urgency and significance, particularly in light of the approaching monsoon season'. It also maintained that while the 'clearance of Barapullah drain was imperative to prevent waterlogging during monsoon', the 'rehabilitation of Madrasi Camp dwellers is also essential for the de-clogging of the Barapullah drain'. Of the 370 jhuggis in Madrasi Camp, residents of 189 have been found eligible for rehabilitation under the Delhi Slum and Jhuggi Jhopri Rehabilitation and Relocation Policy, 2015. Set to be rehabilitated to Narela, the residents had highlighted before the court that the flats where they would stay lacked basic amenities. While noting that the 'demolition ought to be done in a systematic manner', the HC directed the authorities — Delhi Development Authority (DDA), Municipal Corporation of Delhi, Delhi Urban Shelter Improve-ment Board (DUSIB), Public Works Department and Government of National Capital Territory of Delhi — to hold two camps between May 10 and 12. While the first camp 'would be for handing over possession letters of the Narela flats', the second 'shall be for the purpose for sanctioning loans, if required'. '… the representatives of banks shall be duly present at the camps so that if any of the dwellers wish to avail of loan facilities, it can be arranged without inconvenience,' the HC directed. The court also directed DDA and DUSIB to ensure that the amenities are made available at the flats in Narela by May 20. After May 20, the bench directed, the Madrasi Camp dwellers 'shall start moving their belongings to the respective flats allotted to them in Narela' and if any of the residents choose not to take possession letters or avail of loan facilities, 'no further opportunity shall be granted to them for seeking allotment of the flats at Narela or any rehabilitation camps'. The court has given the dwellers time between May 20 and 31 to shift out of Madrasi Camp, following which, demolition shall begin from June 1.

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